silence donald trump? that is the question that will soon be in the hands of a manhattan jury. it is their only decision, how much trump owes e. jean carroll for repeatedly defaming her. her lawyers dangling one number, $12 million. we re live from the courthouse. plus, donald trump s tight grip around the gop being tested now on capitol hill amid accusations he s trying to tank a bipartisan border deal in order to boost his campaign. and the u.n. s top court demands israel do everything in its power to prevent acts of genocide in gaza but stopped short of calling for a cease fire. we ll talk to a top adviser for israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu coming up. but we begin with donald trump back in that new york city courtroom where the bottom line of his bank account is at stake today. and like a lot of things involving the former president, it all went off course and quickly. even before the jury came in, the judge admonished trump s lawyer, alina habba for showi
and subway choking victim jordan neely s family calling the indictment of daniel penny, quote, the right result for the wrong he committed. what nbc news has learned about the charge he ll be facing coming up. but we ll start with new reporting that former president donald trump had multiple opportunities to resolve the standoff over classified documents amicably but opted out every time. according to the washington post trump time and time again rejected the advice of lawyers and advisers who urged him to cooperate and repeatedly refused to give documents back, even when some of his longest-serving advisers warned of peril and some flew to mar-a-lago to beg him to return them. other advisers told the post that the fact that the fbi and national archives wanted the documents so badly made trump even less inclined to give them back. now the former president s lifelong penchant for digging in and doubling down isn t just putting hmm at legal risk, it s drawing republicans
stars through the perilous fight o er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rocket s red glare, the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there o say does that star spangled banner yet wave o er the land of the free and the home of the brave will: welcome to fox & friends on this sunday morning coming to you live from el paso, texas, ahead of president joe biden s visit. we join you here. will cain, emily campano, pete hegseth. along the southern border. pete: you re fortunate. you don t have to wear a town. that is mountain time. very early for will cain. god morning emily as well. good morning. pete: can t see it is spot. will: i will trade you a necktie for some long johns right now. it is about 32 degrees right here. i m within the city of el paso, pete. the city of el paso, essentially, but for the rio grande river and border blends into juarez, mexico. i don t know if you see behind me. this is a s
you will see there today. well tomorrow, maybe they will pass a rules package. we re glad you re here on fox & friends. emily campano in for rachel. emily: honor to be here as always. pete: will cain, our man on the border this morning in el paso, texas, ahead of joe biden s highly sanitized visit down there will, even just last hour, the interview with residents, it is staggering the quality of life the way in which their quality of life was eroded. you wonder whether joe biden will actually see that. will: i m glad you guys got a chance to here that back in the studio in new york. we ll share with you, i think we have updated numbers throughout this hour, in coming minutes in fact on number of encounters, got-aways, but sometimes numbers don t tell you appropriate context. to sit here listening to the ladies lifelong residents of el paso, legal immigrants right over the border i can see it, juarez, to hear them describe what the difference in their life, to hear change, i
a critical rebound, or is it the calm before the storm? the data is in and the u.s. economy grew by more than expected last quarter putting an end to a six-month slump and the president is hoping this bounce gives democrats a jolt before election day. but before we discuss the political fallout let s look at the numbers. with cnn s matt egan and rahel soloman. break this down for us. does this mean we are out of the woods. unfortunately, not so much. great news that the economy bounced back last quarter. but that doesn t mean that the risk of a recession going forward has gone away. both things can be true at the same time. today s report showed that gdp increased last quarter at an annual rate of 2.6%. pretty solid. i think that plus low unemployment should put to rest this idea that the economy is already in a recession but this gdp report had concerning signals. it s really the improvement was driven by trade, exports were up. imports went down. that alone was enough to